Most people do not visit healthcare sites until they are ill. But when that happens and one's patent pill box or neighbourhood physician doesn't seem to be the cure, a flurry of searches follow before further consultations can take place. In the good old days, human contacts and word of mouth used to help us out. Today, we turn to the Internet to find out more about
All these may help gain traction in a country where the majority is constantly on the lookout for affordable but quality healthcare. This is also pushing the cost-effective, wide-reaching
Who runs Surgerica.com: A team of three -
What inspired the venture: Medical emergency at a personal level. When Amit's father underwent a coronary artery bypass surgery), no information was available about
What's the pitch: Connect to choose, consult and compare (costs) for your care. In other words, it is connecting patients with data and doctors to usher in some much-needed transparency in pricing and treatment.
How it works: Type in your query on the site and choose the doctor/hospital you want to contact. One can also upload healthcare records to speed up the diagnosis. Once that is done, the start-up will help you get a brief medical opinion, along with a provisional line of treatment and estimated cost. Anyone looking for service and
But there is more on the platter including
One can register with Surgerica for a nominal sum of Rs 55 or $1 and the service loop completes in a few simple steps - post query, choose hospitals (alternatively, Surgerica's panel can suggest one) and get a detailed treatment plan with an indicative price estimate. Once things are finalised, a patient can book admission through the portal and go ahead with the treatment.
Claim to fame: Traction and networks. The site is just 90 days old (it became fully functional from July 22, 2013), but claims to have 2,000 registered users besides a network of over 5,000 doctors and 900-plus hospitals. Surgerica currently covers 50-plus specialties and 2,000-plus medical procedures. It has also closed a B2B deal with an insurance company with 11 million policy holders and its services will be rolled out to these customers from January next year. The company is now actively targeting 3 countries (
Show me the money: Currently, revenues are generated through paid B2C services ranging from $1-19. The B2B model will go live from next year and the company aims to strike more deals with large insurance firms who will be offering Surgerica's services to their policy holders. A tie-up with medical tourism companies and a mobile app are also on the cards, which will introduce new revenue channels. As for funding, the start-up is looking for early-stage investment and may soon wrap up a deal.
Biggest challenge: Getting more hospitals on board and keeping them active and engaged on the portal - so that users get response within the specified time limit. The second challenge is